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  2. Critical Path (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_Path_(book)

    Critical Path is a book written by US author and inventor R. Buckminster Fuller with the assistance of Kiyoshi Kuromiya.First published in 1981, it is alongside Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth one of Fuller's best-known works.

  3. Civilization and Its Discontents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civilization_and_Its...

    The third chapter of the book addresses a fundamental paradox of civilization: it is a tool we have created to protect ourselves from unhappiness, and yet it is our largest source of unhappiness. People become neurotic because they cannot tolerate the frustration which society imposes in the service of its cultural ideals.

  4. Gateway to the Great Books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gateway_to_the_Great_Books

    The set included an index similar to the Great Books' Syntopicon, along with reading plans of increasing difficulty.Hutchins wrote an introduction with a more informal tone than he used in The Great Conversation, his preface to the Great Books, and that chiefly explained the relevance of most of the categories making up the set: "The Imagination of Man" (about fiction and drama), "Man and ...

  5. The Decline of the West - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Decline_of_the_West

    For him, Civilization is what a Culture becomes once its creative impulses wane and become overwhelmed by critical impulses. Culture is the becoming, Civilization is the thing which a culture becomes. Rousseau, Socrates, and Buddha each mark the point where their Cultures transformed into Civilization. They each buried centuries of spiritual ...

  6. 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1177_B.C.:_The_Year...

    The book focuses on Cline's hypothesis for the Late Bronze Age collapse of civilization, a transition period that affected the Egyptians, Hittites, Canaanites, Cypriots, Minoans, Mycenaeans, Assyrians and Babylonians; varied heterogeneous cultures populating eight powerful and flourishing states intermingling via trade, commerce, exchange and "cultural piggybacking," despite "all the ...

  7. The Dawn of Everything - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dawn_of_Everything

    The authors open the book by suggesting that current popular views on the progress of western civilization, as presented by Francis Fukuyama, Jared Diamond, Yuval Noah Harari, Charles C. Mann, Steven Pinker, and Ian Morris, are not supported by anthropological or archaeological evidence, but owe more to philosophical dogmas inherited unthinkingly from the Age of Enlightenment.

  8. How to Read a Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Read_a_Book

    Critical stage: In the third stage of analytical reading, Adler directs the reader to critique the book. He asserts that upon understanding the author's propositions and arguments, the reader has been elevated to the author's level of understanding and is now able (and obligated) to judge the book's merit and accuracy.

  9. The Civilizing Process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Civilizing_Process

    Covering European history from roughly 800 AD to 1900 AD, it is the first formal analysis and theory of civilization. Elias proposes a double sociogenesis of the state: the social development of the state has two sides, mental and political. The civilisation process that Elias describes results in a profound change in human behaviour.